Zain Islam-Hashmi has created his niche as an architect of fashion, who creates clothing and wardrobe ensembles with materials like resin, cement and plexiglass.

Islam-Hashmi, head designer for Carnegie Mellon University's annual Lunar Gala fashion show, graduates this spring with a bachelor's degree in architecture and minors in intelligent environments and digital fabrication. He has taken advantage of opportunities at CMU and around the world and has shaped them into something unique.

"I really liked the fact that CMU was so interdisciplinary...and there were possibilities to do things that weren't offered yet. When I compared it to other universities, I felt like there were more options at CMU," he said.

For the third year, Islam-Hashmi will present a fashion line at the Lunar Gala that relies heavily on materials more commonly found in architecture and the construction industry. His teammates on the line, known as Alluminare, are Mariana Alberola Rezza, M.Arch ’19 and Stephanie Smid, MAAD ’19. Islam-Hashmi said that for architecture and fashion are not mutually exclusive.

"We have an understanding of people in architecture. Fashion is a way to deepen that interaction," said Islam-Hashmi, a past chapter president of the American Institute of Architecture Students. "There's a lot of techniques and material in architecture that could have a lot of relation and applicability in fashion. Merging the two helps bridge the two worlds, where each learns from the other."

Last spring some of his fashion designs used dirt, concrete, sand and paper, and he was recognized as a winner at Pittsburgh's Ecolution: Forces of Nature fashion show, which challenged designers to incorporate recycled and reused materials.

Zain Islam-Hashmi adjusts a top during a rehearsal for Lunar Gala, which will be at 8:00pm on Saturday 02 March at the Cohon University Center. Image Credit: Carnegie Mellon University

Zain Islam-Hashmi has taken advantage of opportunities provided by CMU and outside entities and shaped them into something unique. Image credit: Zain Islam-Hashmi

Zain Islam-Hashmi has spent his summers interning around the world from Pakistan, Japan, Ghana and France. In France he helped host hands-on summer workshops at Domaine de Boisbuchet in southwest France for aspiring architects and designers. Image credit: Zain Islam-Hashmi

Zain Islam-Hashmi has spent his summers interning around the world from Pakistan, Japan, Ghana and France. In Ghana, he volunteered to help design and build a clinic in the village of Yeboahkrom. Image credit: Zain Islam-Hashmi

"They've challenged my writing and how I articulate what I'm thinking. They've given me a bigger, broader understanding of what research is and what it can be. There are so many diverse and interesting things happen at Carnegie Mellon," he said.

Richelle Bernazzoli, assistant director of undergraduate research and national fellowships in CMU's Undergraduate Research Office, has helped guide Islam-Hashmi's work.

"Undergraduates, like Zain, are making exciting connections between disparate fields to solve pressing real-world problems and to add to the artistic context," Bernazzoli said. "The creativity and intellectual adventurousness we witness in students like Zain truly captures the spirit of CMU: Interdisciplinarity, innovation and passion."

Islam-Hashmi has used Small Undergraduate Research grants and Summer Research Fellowships to help support his Lunar Gala fashion line and a new map of Pittsburgh. The map, which he will build with fellow architecture student Gargi Lagvankar, is expected to be housed in a stairwell of the College of Fine Arts Building.

Architecture Professor Jeremy Ficca has been impressed by Islam-Hashmi, with whom he has worked as a studio instructor, thesis adviser and Director of the Design Fabrication Laboratory.

"I'm quite impressed with Zain's resourcefulness. He has leveraged a wide range of opportunities, on campus and across the globe, to further his interests, knowledge, and skills." Ficca said.

Carnegie Mellon's School of Architecture aims to prepare students to be interdisciplinary design thinkers in diverse global contexts. Ficca said the school aims to provide opportunities for students to apply what they are learning in their research into practice.

"Architecture can serve as a lens to understand our increasingly complex world. The range of topics our students address through their design work is testament to the breadth of issues and conditions related to architecture." Ficca said.